Also, I don't hate Spinosaurus. I understand what they were trying to achieve back then, and it was Spielberg decision after all, in a time where they wanted to give us something new. I understand the outrage with the T-rex killing, but I think that's what they tried to do in order to state how scary and savage spinosaurus was. And it worked for me, as I remember getting that feel of "everything goes" after that scene. Sadly, the rest of the movie became extremely family-friendly and safe after that.

Also, I don't hate Spinosaurus. I understand what they were trying to achieve back then, and it was Spielberg decision after all, in a time where they wanted to give us something new. I understand the outrage with the T-rex killing, but I think that's what they tried to do in order to state how scary and savage spinosaurus was. And it worked for me, as I remember getting that feel of "everything goes" after that scene. Sadly, the rest of the movie became extremely family-friendly and safe after that.

I've never considered Jurassic Park III a dreadful sequel, as there is still much to like in it. What brings it down are some very odd choices from the director where he inserts awkward comedy in sequences that otherwise could be epic. Case in point, the final spinosaurus attack. Watching the BTS documentary yesterday, it's sad to see how much work was done to technically achieve a sequence as complex as that one with such a huge animatronic. Joe Johnston had everything to create a great and suspenseful aquatic sequence, but instead opted to make it play alongside the kid and the Barney dancing thing to gain cheap laughs from the audience. He brought too much Jumanji to the equation and robs the scene from any menace it could have. It's almost infuriating.

To this day, the sequence that still amazes me in its execution from The Lost World: Jurassic Park, is the rexes attack to the trailers. I mean, it's Spielberg at his best, building slowly the suspense since the moment the baby rex is taken by Sarah and Nick, then the entrance of the parents, the breaking glass, Eddie's feats to save his friends, all of those great action pieces. The arrival of the two rexes at the climax, when Eddie is finally near to save them, is the icing of the cake, and it's amazing up to this day. Spielberg ends the sequence with a low punch for the audience as Eddie is torn apart in what is the most graphic sequence in all the Jurassic movies, and one of the most violent in PG-13 cinema. The fact that it happens to a character that was selflessly doing all he could to save the life of his friends makes it all the worse, and I remember being shocked at the theater when I watched it for the first time. Up until that point, the movie has been all comedy and adv...

So guys, how and with whom are you gonna watch Jurassic World for the first time? My top choice would be with my mom if she was still with me :( and for years, I kinda have been thinking about the day I watched another Jurassic movie again and where or with whom I was gonna watch it. In the end, it seems I'm going with new buddies who are also fans, and the second time would be with my dad. The question is if it should be 3D or 2D. Here most of the cinemas will play it in 3D. and the biggest screen is a 4D one. Choices, choices...

I'm seeing it with my fiancee and with WalkAway, but I'm absolutely going with my Dad. He took me 22 years ago to see Jurassic Park and I wouldn't want to watch it any other way - we have a bond of movies together.

Not sure, whoever wants to go - would be great to go with a whole bunch of people I think! I'll be seeing it in D-Box 3D most likely. Not sure how much Trevorrow has paid attention to the 3D aspect of it buuut the re-release of JP1 had shockingly good 3D

Hi guys, made this the other day based in an idea I saw on the Internet. I just couldn't find a wallpaper that made justice to the excitement the child in me feels for the next week. Can't show it full size here, but anyway, I wanted to share it with you.

The Amazing Spider-Man 2 was... well, certainly amazing, and this comes from a big skeptic of this reboot. I didn't hate the last one, but this sequel definitely justifies the existence of the new saga, and earned my respect for it. A work of quality in every aspect, and a soundtrack that has haunted me since the night I saw the film. Harry, Electro, Spidey and even Gwen have all emotional or energetic themes. Seems to me the only bad job in this sequel was by the marketing department, as they made it seem dull, generic, and devoid of the true spirit of the movie. Every criticized decision works in favor of the story when you watch it. By the way, this one is definitively worth paying for the 3D.

I've heard from someone who also saw who thought it was a complete mess of a movie......but, who knows. I'll definitely be checking it out upon release. The one thing I really hated about the first ASM was the really crappy score by James Horner. If the sequel can improve upon that, it's already won me over a bit.

Jamie Foxx to EW: "So at one point we were doing this green screen thing, and [Marc Webb] says, 'Just ad-lib something.' And I said, "The itsy-bitsy spider went up the water spout, down came... Electro... and wiped the spider out."
Alright, I give up. At this point I'm exhausted of staying in positive denial about this film.

Considering they don't really know wtf they're doing and the first one had like 30 minutes of cut scenes and scrapped plot aspects THAT WE KNOW of, I dunno, that line probably won't make the final film.

I hope the kid in all of us has an epic time this night. I'd hope we all could watch this film together MFC, you've made the wait for this movie something really special for this fan. Let's believe again!

Just a few hours to see the Man of Steel. To this day, there hasn't been a movie of Zack Snyder I haven't liked, and that includes the universally hated Sucker Punch. I don't care what critics say, somehow I know I'm in for an epic night.